Refine
Year of publication
- 2017 (19) (remove)
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (11)
- Part of a Book (5)
- Contribution to a Periodical (2)
- Article (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- no (19)
Keywords
- CPS (1)
- Change Request (1)
- Corporate Network (1)
- Digitaler Schatten (1)
- Echtzeit (1)
- Energieflexibilitäten (1)
- Energiemanagement (2)
- Energy Management (1)
- Enterprise-Resource-Planning (1)
- Exzellenzcluster (1)
Institute
Growing information systems (IS) often come along with growing IT complexity, because of emerging rag rug landscapes. This development causes rising IT costs and dependencies, which hinder the maintenance and expansion of the IS landscape. This article outlines the current research on published and presented methods to manage the rising IT complexity in a literature review. Because definitions of “IT complexity” vary a lot in literature, this paper also includes a definition of the term. In addition to that, it delivers a presentation of the used research methodology. Subsequently, it presents the findings in literature, highlights the research gap and – based on the literature analysis – presents, the steps that need to be taken. A discussion of the results and a summary complete the article.
Nowadays one of the most challenging tasks of producing companies is the growing complexity due to the globalization and digitalization. Especially in high wage countries, the ability to deliver fast and to a fixed date gets more and more important. To achieve this logistic target, it is necessary to optimize the Production Planning and Control (hereinafter PPC). This study investigates the effects of a change of the scheduling parameters on a target system. The focused research questions are: How can the effect of a scheduling parametersvariation on the target system of the PPC can be displayed efficiently? Is it possible to review the effect of the scheduling parameters-variation quantitatively and to derive action options?
The topics Internet of Things and Industry 4.0 increasingly lead to the fact that the customer is increasingly focused on manufacturing companies. He wants to know delivery date of the product, wants to make changes at short notice, get an individualized product and much more. Technologically, these requirements have already been met, but the structures within the company as well as the operational processes are not yet or only partially prepared to cope with the increasing complexity and dynamics of production. This leads to many deviations with which the production controller must deal, whether they are complex or trivial.
In order to counteract the increasing number and frequency of deviation situations which are currently encountered with complex manual interventions, it is necessary to systematically evaluate deviations and then to allocate them a dominant reaction strategy (manual, partially automated, automated) from which a suitable reaction measure can be derived. This relieves the production controller, since assistance systems partially eliminate deviations independently.
As a result, the production controller gets more time to deal with the cause of deviations so that a new occurrence of deviations can be avoided and the number of deviations can be reduced sustainably. The following paper provides a solution for the assessment of deviations. In addition, it includes differentiation logic to allocate one of the three different reaction strategies to the identified deviation.
Production in high-wage countries can be made more efficient, cost-effective, and flexible by solving the conflict between planning and value orientation. A promising approach is to focus on planning and decision-making processes (production planning and control, design of production processes and machinery, etc.) and to aim to maximize overall planning efficiency. Planning efficiency can be expressed as the ratio between the benefit generated by preparing detailed process instructions to produce the parts or components and the corresponding planning efforts. Industrial companies wanting to gain a competitive advantage in dynamic global markets have to identify a set of non-dominated solutions with the most favorable effort–benefit ratio rather than a single solution. The optimum between detailed planning and the immediate implementation of value-adding activities (process steps) in the process chain needs to be found dynamically for each product.
This research area focuses on the management systems and principles of a production system. It aims at controlling the complex interplay of heterogeneous processes in a highly dynamic environment, with special focus on individualized products in high-wage countries. The project addresses the comprehensive application of self-optimizing principles on all levels of the value chain. This implies the integration of self-optimizing control loops on cell level, with those addressing the production planning and control as well as supply chain and quality management aspects. A specific focus is on the consideration of human decisions during the production process. To establish socio-technical control loops, it is necessary to understand how human decisions are made in diffuse working processes as well as how cognitive and affective abilities form the human factor within production processes.
Working capital management is one of the key disciplines that must be prudently monitored for a firm in pursuit of profits, liquidity and growth. The focus of this paper is on the engineer-to-order manufacturers, and the objective is to analyze the correlations between the reference processes of the engineer-to-order production approach with the key postulates of working-capital management and deliver a mathematical operating curves model, whose purpose and goal is basing on the rationale, that is underlying in the parent logistic operating curves theory. [https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-66926-7_30]
Die Produktentwicklung beeinflusst die Kostenentstehung eines Produkts über den gesamten Lebenszyklus. Daher müssen vielfältige Restriktionen frühzeitig berücksichtigt werden, wie Beanspruchungen an das Produkt oder Restriktionen aus der Instandhaltung und dem Recycling. Die Produktentwicklung beeinflusst auch maßgeblich die Variantenentstehung und legt die Produktvielfalt, die Produktstruktur und die Kosten der Varianten fest. Die Koordination der Aktivitäten in der Produktentwicklung basiert auf einem produktübergreifenden Projektmanagement, um die interdisziplinäre Zusammenarbeit zu organisieren. [https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-662-55426-5_23]
Die zunehmende Konzentration von Unternehmen auf ihre Kernkompetenzen und das Agieren auf einem weltweiten Markt führen zu einer stärkeren Kooperation in Unternehmensnetzwerken. Die Organisationsformen von Unternehmensnetzwerken können durch ihre Struktur und ihren Grad der Koordination beschrieben werden. Als Beispiel eines geführten und polyzentrisch strukturierten Unternehmensnetzwerks wird die Virtuelle Fabrik erläutert. Die Virtuelle Fabrik schafft Rahmenbedingungen für Unternehmen, um sich effizient in Ad-hoc-Kooperationen zu organisieren. [https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-662-55426-5_29]
Die Herausforderungen der Zukunft werden geprägt durch digital veredelte Produkte von höchster Qualität und hoher Variantenvielfalt bei gleichzeitig kleiner werdenden Losgrößen. Konventionelle Entwicklungsmethoden stoßen aufgrund zunehmender Komplexität und kürzer werdender Lebenszyklen auf Produktebene an ihre Grenzen. Dadurch werden bei kundenindividueller Produktion die Aufwände in der Arbeitsplanung und -vorbereitung überproportional größer. Eine mögliche Lösung stellt die generative Erstellung der Produktionsstückliste während der Montage dar. Durch das eventbasierte „Mitschreiben der Montage“ werden administrative und planungsintensive Prozesse in der Arbeitsvorbereitung überproportional reduziert und die Erstellung der Stückliste in die manuelle Montage transferiert.